Creating Videos – The Technical Side

Eric and I love creating videos together. What really makes us such a great team, is that I am very creative and visionary, while Eric is incredibly mindful of the details and what I term “technical stuff”. When I’m recording a video, I’m looking at the angle of the light, the composition of the shot, and the story it tells. Without Eric’s help, I sometimes end up with an overly long video complete with lousy audio and cheesy music. We really balance each other out.

Last week we had the opportunity to speak on telling stories through video. Below are Eric’s notes for teaching the technical side of video. This post does contain some affiliate links, which does not create any additional cost for you, just gives us a little tiny commission (if you buy something) to help keep Eating Richly running. We made sure to link to products we have used or have had recommended to us by other professionals.

Camera

You can use a cellphone just remember to hold it horizontally so the picture is wider than it is tall

After that is a DSLR which has better image quality but you need to be comfortable with the manual features of a DSLR. After using our camcorder for a while we saved up for a few years and now use the Canon 5D mkII.

You can use daylight bulbs from the hardware store (just use them in a lamp) and fabric or paper to diffuse the light to make it nice and soft. Just be aware of the fire danger of having something flammable next to something hot!

You can also purchase continuous lighting kits, those lights will work for photos or videos. Just make sure it’s continuous light, not a flash.

Be careful not to mix light temperatures.

Over exposure – Often times it is better for the video to be too bright than to be too dark, unless the emotion/hook you are going for calls for a dark and moody scene.

Editing

If you plan to edit, film for editing which means starting clips early and recording a few seconds afterwards.

Most people these days are using Adobe for its cost and because it works great with other adobe products like Photoshop, and it’s pretty easy to use.

Music

You need to think about music licenses and copyrights when it comes to music, if you use Creative Commons licensed music make sure that it allows commercial use, if you are making any kind of revenue or if you ever think that you will. You can also buy Royalty Free music for a one time cost that also comes with a license on what you can use it for and typically a YouTube video is covered at the lowest price!

YouTube will force ads on your video that pays the owner if you do not own the music or it will be taken down. If you get a copyright strike on a YouTube video you will have to go to “copyright school” and if you get 3 strikes in 6 months you will have your account removed. Also a single copyright strike can affect some features of YouTube like custom thumbnails.

Keep in mind that a video should be around 2 minutes so look for a song that would be easy to shorten.

Typekit is included with Adobe subscription plans and has a lot of great premium fonts.

Uploading

YouTube has the widest audience

Vimeo is more artistic and has a better looking website. You pretty much have to pay to get a great experience. They also have a support forum with helpful moderators.

If you are not sure how to embed a video from YouTube or Vimeo into a blog post check your blog software, with WordPress you do not need to use the embed html as they will do it for you when you paste a direct link to the video.

You can also skip YouTube or Vimeo and embed it directly in your post.

Make sure that if you have a related blog post to include the link in the video description.

For Facebook, upload the video directly to Facebook, rather than from YouTube. They also have a call to action feature, so you can send people to your newsletter sign up for instance. We’ve learned from Facebook analytics, that the majority of people click away once they see the main highlight of the video, so mention your call to action earlier.

Audience building

YouTube lets you put links called annotations to your other videos on the video to increase retention and engagement. You can only click these links from a computer, so make sure to put the links in the video description as well. They also have cards, which work on mobile and desktop, but people are less likely to click on those so still include it in the description.

How to post to social media, sharing

The best way is to post manually on Facebook and Twitter, and not have it auto post from one to the other. If you post it manually each will create a thumbnail of the video instead of just a link. People are more likely to watch a video if there is a thumbnail.

Make sure to include links to your website and your social media in the description.

Stats on engagement

YouTube, Vimeo Plus and Facebook provide Analytics.

Speaking of engagement you are more likely to get people to click on and watch your video if you use a custom thumbnail. If you trust YouTube or Vimeo to pick one it can often be an unflattering picture of you talking mid sentence. Videos that have words on the thumbnail get more views, so we create ours in Photoshop.

These thumbnails get shrunken down to super small on phones so create a very basic thumbnail instead of one with fine details.

People more likely to click thumbnails with text

Limited to less than 2mb.

We want to say a HUGE thank you to all of you who attended our session. If anyone has any questions, or any great additions, please feel free to leave them in the comments.

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